Inner Timing: Returning to Judea
John 11:6-7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read John 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
When told of Lazarus' sickness, Jesus stays two days where he is, then says to his disciples Let us go into Judaea again.
Neville's Inner Vision
This excerpt invites a Neville Goddard-like reading: the outer tale of delay is a profound inner discipline. The two days of abode symbolize the soul’s pause in a fixed state of consciousness, a deliberate waiting while the mind settles fear, doubt, or the impulse to force results. The command to return to Judaea is not a mere geographic instruction but a bold act of consciousness—an I AM move from stillness into a situation once deemed dangerous or difficult. Healing, then, is not a single external sign but an inner alignment with divine timing: to wait is to confirm what you already are, and to move is to embody that reality in action. As you honor the inner season, you trust that Providence is guiding your next appearance in the very field you once avoided. The presence of God is the quiet sense, the I AM awareness, that remains constant while the world negotiates its shifts. In this order, your healing unfolds as consciousness itself, arriving where you are, when you are truly ready.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Sit quietly and assume I am the I AM, whole and well. See yourself returning to the Judea you faced, now moving with quiet trust; feel it real.
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